2 women drown in back of police van swept away by Florence flooding

Two South Carolina detainees drowned in a prison transport van when floodwater from the aftermath of Hurricane Florence overtook the vehicle, according to the Horry County Sheriff's Office.

2 women drown in back of police van swept away by Florence flooding

Two South Carolina detainees drowned in a prison transport van when floodwater from the aftermath of Hurricane Florence overtook the vehicle, according to the Horry County Sheriff's Office.

Two South Carolina mental health patients drowned in a prison transport van when floodwater from the aftermath of Hurricane Florence overtook the vehicle, according to the Horry County Sheriff’s Office.

Two deputies escaped the vehicle, a news release said. They have been placed on administrative leave, the HCSO said in a statement. CNN’s request for the names of the deputies has not been answered.

Harrowing police scanner audio provides details of the efforts to save the women, who could be heard talking as rescuers scrambled to save them.

“Tonight’s incident is a tragedy. Just like you, we have questions we want answered,” Horry County Sheriff Phillip Thompson said.

The victims were identified as Windy Newton, 45, of Shallotte, North Carolina, and Nicolette Green, 43, of Myrtle Beach. The sheriff’s office characterized them as detainees.

Their bodies were recovered by divers Wednesday evening, the sheriff’s office said.

The deputies were transporting the women from Conway, near the coast, to Darlington, about 65 miles northwest, on Tuesday night.

According to CNN affiliate WPDE, the women were being transported from a hospital in Loris and from the Waccamaw Center for Mental Health in Conway to McLeod Health Darlington, Chief Deputy Tom Fox said

The women were mental health patients headed to Darlington, Fox told CNN. But he declined to divulge from what facilities they were being transported.

High water swept away the vehicle as it traveled down US 76, about a half-mile from the Little Pee Dee River, which separates Mullins from the town of Nichols.

“The two deputies attempted to extricate the persons being transported,” the news release said. “Despite persistent and ongoing efforts, floodwater rose rapidly and the deputies were unable to open the doors to reach the individuals inside the van.”

Asked how the women were restrained in the back of the van, Fox told CNN they were “seat belted.”

Rescue teams were able to save the deputies from the van’s roof. But they could not pull the vehicle from the water because it was too dangerous, according to the release. They are still trying to recover the vehicle, the Sheriff’s Office said.

The river stands at more than 14 feet and is expected to reach 15.6 feet by Thursday night. Flood stage for the Little Pee Dee is 9 feet.

Police scanner audio captured by CNN affiliate WMBF indicates the floodwater carried the van through a bridge guardrail near the Little Pee Dee Lodge on the Nichols side of the river.

“The officers report they got out. The van is submerged, and they cannot get their inmates out,” an unidentified person says.

Later, someone else reports, “We have the two deputies that are out of the van and are secure on the boat. The two inmates are in the back of the van — are still in the van — and they’re talking, and they’re working on getting them out now.”

The coroner confirmed Tuesday night that the women had died.

The investigation has been handed over to the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, the news release said.

Investigators are in the early stages of conducting interviews and gathering evidence, SLED spokesman Thom Berry said. The bodies will be taken to the Medical University of South Carolina for autopsies, he said.